When you come here, nobody judges you, nobody’s bothered what your background is,” says Colin Dagg, who runs Keep Active in Sunderland, which works with the community – children, people with addiction issues, and more – to improve fitness as a way of improving lives.
Last summer, the riots that engulfed the country also caught alight in Sunderland. The first person in the UK charged with rioting was a 15-year-old from Sunderland. Hundreds of people unleashed on the city, burning cars and attacking police officers. A Citizens’ Advice office was set on fire.
“All the schools we work with were panic stricken,” says Dagg. Parents were scared to go and pick up children from holiday activities, worried they’d get caught up in the disorder.
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The immediate aftermath was one of shock – but also defiance.
“They will not define our reputation,” the region’s mayor Kim McGuinness said. “They will not define our place in the world.”